Senator KENNEDY. Governor Meyner, Mayor Kenny,
members of the city government, your two distinguished Congressmen, Congressman
Gallagher, whom I know you are going to elect again [applause], Congressman
Daniels, who deserves your support at the polls on Tuesday [applause],
Thorn Lord, who will be the next U.S. Senator from the State of New Jersey
[applause], ladies and gentlemen: I come here and this campaign is coming
to an end. This is the last speech that I make outside of New England,
and I come here tonight to a great Democratic city and county and ask your
support on Tuesday. [Applause.] This campaign has taken us to all sections
of the United States, to every State, over a period of many months, and
in the next 30 hours this campaign will come to a close, and then the people
of the United States must make their decision. I believe that the people
of the United States face two very distinct choices, between a party and
a candidate who have opposed progress throughout their respective careers,
and a party and a candidate who have supported progress throughout their
respective careers.
I believe in 1960 that this country needs
a Democratic administration. [Applause.] That this country needs the kind
of talented men and women to serve in all there is of our National Government,
to represent us across the world, to speak with vigor and force. I come
from a party and I stand proudly as its candidate, who initiated all the
great pieces of social legislation, which means so much in the lives of
our citizens, and Mr. Nixon comes from a party, and he is identified with
it [response from the audience], that bears the dubious distinction of
having opposed every single one of these pieces of social legislation.
I asked a month ago in Cleveland if someone
could tell me one progressive thing that the Republican Party had stood
for or done this century, and when nobody answered, I was criticized the
next day by the paper, a Republican paper, who said that I had ignored
the accomplishments of President Taft in the field of child labor in 1904.
[Response from the audience.]
All right, what have they done since 1904,
I asked them, and what have they done since 1932? [Response from the audience.]
Or what have they done since 1953? [Response from the audience.]
I must say, you must have been here for a while practicing. [Laughter.]
How did you know I was going to ask that question? [Laughter.] In any case,
you have been here, I understand, for about 2 or 3 or 4 hours. [Response
from the audience.] Six hours. I want you all to keep your health, because
we need you on Tuesday. [Laughter.]
This campaign is vitally important to the
State of New Jersey, the State of New Jersey is vitally important to the
country. This county may well determine what the State of New Jersey does,
and the 14 electoral votes [response from the audience] - 16 electoral
votes of New Jersey - this is the only audience that knows how many electoral
votes they have. [Laughter and applause.] This must be a very politically
active city. Is it? [Response from the audience.] There is a rumor
to that effect. So it is 16 votes. That is even better. Those 16 votes
may well determine who will be the next President of the United States.
[Applause.] And the next President of the United States may well determine,
not only the great issues of war and peace, but may also determine what
kind of a country we have, which direction we are going, what kind of economy
we have, what kind of employment security you have, what assurances you
have on the education of your children, that they can get to change, that
in your old age or your family's old age, there will be medical care tied
to social security - all these are matters that come across the desk of
the President of the United States. President Truman used to have a sign
which says, "The Buck Stops Here." Sooner or later, every problem which
faces us as a people comes before the President of the United States, and
on that basis, and recognizing full well the high responsibilities and
burdens of that office which are greater now than they have ever been in
the past, I still come here and ask your support in order to win that position,
not because [applause] - not just because I think it is a major mistake
to elect Mr. Nixon and the Republican Party in 1960 [response from the
audience] but also because I believe the Presidency is the key office,
not only in this country, but in the whole free world, and I believe the
next President of the United States has to be, by conviction and not merely
by electioneering commitments, has to be committed to progress, which Mr.
Nixon in his career has not been. [Applause.]
We stand together in this fight. This is a
fight that can be won. It can be won in this State, and I come here in
the dying days of this campaign, as we leave now for Lewiston, Maine, and
Providence, R.I., tonight, I come here to this county and ask you to help
us on Tuesday by turning out the largest Democratic majority that this
county has turned out for 20 years. [Applause.] We shall not slumber and
we shall keep working for the next 36 hours, until we know what decision
the people of this country are going to make. Thank you. [Applause.]
Let me just say, win or lose, good or bad,
up or down, fair wind or bad, I believe that the United States has benefited
by this campaign. I believe that Mr. Nixon and the Republican Party have
learned a lesson, that in a dangerous and trying time in the life of this
country there is no substitute for action. We cannot drift or sleep or
lie at anchor. This country is about to begin another great march forward,
and in the lead will be the county of Hudson and the city of Jersey. Thank
you. [Applause.]